Saturday, October 23, 2010

The Definition of Love

The Definition of Love

By Andrew Marvell

Germany


THE DEFINITION OF LOVE.
by Andrew Marvell


I.
MY Love is of a birth as rare
    As 'tis, for object, strange and high ;
It was begotten by Despair,
    Upon Impossibility.

II.
Magnanimous Despair alone
    Could show me so divine a thing,
Where feeble hope could ne'er have flown,
    But vainly flapped its tinsel wing.

III.
And yet I quickly might arrive
    Where my extended soul is fixed ;
But Fate does iron wedges drive,
    And always crowds itself betwixt.

IV.
For Fate with jealous eye does see
    Two perfect loves, nor lets them close ;
Their union would her ruin be,
    And her tyrannic power depose.

V.
And therefore her decrees of steel
    Us as the distant poles have placed,
(Though Love's whole world on us doth wheel),
    Not by themselves to be embraced,

VI.
Unless the giddy heaven fall,
    And earth some new convulsion tear.
And, us to join, the world should all
    Be cramp'd into a planisphere.

VII.
As lines, so love's oblique, may well
    Themselves in every angle greet :
But ours, so truly parallel,
    Though infinite, can never meet.

VIII.
Therefore the love which us doth bind,
    But Fate so enviously debars,
Is the conjunction of the mind,
    And opposition of the stars.

Karma


There are people in your life who really need you and are counting on you to be there for them, without judgment or expectations. When you show up for them - even when they don't show up for you in the same way - the Light will show up for you when you need it most.


Today, throw "what have you done for me lately" out the window. Be there, heart open, no questions asked.

REGRETS OF THE DYING

When questioned about any regrets they had or anything they would do differently, common themes surfaced again and again. Here are the most common five:

1. I wish I'd had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.
This was the most common regret of all. When people realise that their life is almost over and look back clearly on it, it is easy to see how many dreams have gone unfulfilled. Most people had not honoured even a half of their dreams and had to die knowing that it was due to choices they had made, or not made.
It is very important to try and honour at least some of your dreams along the way. From the moment that you lose your health, it is too late. Health brings a freedom very few realise, until they no longer have it.

2. I wish I didn't work so hard.
This came from every male patient that I nursed. They missed their children's youth and their partner's companionship. Women also spoke of this regret. But as most were from an older generation, many of the female patients had not been breadwinners. All of the men I nursed deeply regretted spending so much of their lives on the treadmill of a work existence.
By simplifying your lifestyle and making conscious choices along the way, it is possible to not need the income that you think you do. And by creating more space in your life, you become happier and more open to new opportunities, ones more suited to your new lifestyle.

3. I wish I'd had the courage to express my feelings.
Many people suppressed their feelings in order to keep peace with others. As a result, they settled for a mediocre existence and never became who they were truly capable of becoming. Many developed illnesses relating to the bitterness and resentment they carried as a result.
We cannot control the reactions of others. However, although people may initially react when you change the way you are by speaking honestly, in the end it raises the relationship to a whole new and healthier level. Either that or it releases the unhealthy relationship from your life. Either way, you win.

4. I wish I had stayed in touch with my friends.
Often they would not truly realise the full benefits of old friends until their dying weeks and it was not always possible to track them down. Many had become so caught up in their own lives that they had let golden friendships slip by over the years. There were many deep regrets about not giving friendships the time and effort that they deserved. Everyone misses their friends when they are dying.
It is common for anyone in a busy lifestyle to let friendships slip. But when you are faced with your approaching death, the physical details of life fall away. People do want to get their financial affairs in order if possible. But it is not money or status that holds the true importance for them. They want to get things in order more for the benefit of those they love. Usually though, they are too ill and weary to ever manage this task. It is all comes down to love and relationships in the end. That is all that remains in the final weeks, love and relationships.

5. I wish that I had let myself be happier.
This is a surprisingly common one. Many did not realise until the end that happiness is a choice.  They had stayed stuck in old patterns and habits. The so-called 'comfort' of familiarity overflowed into their emotions, as well as their physical lives. Fear of change had them pretending to others, and to their selves, that they were content. When deep within, they longed to laugh properly and have silliness in their life again.
When you are on your deathbed, what others think of you is a long way from your mind. How wonderful to be able to let go and smile again, long before you are dying.

Life is a choice. It is YOUR life. Choose consciously, choose wisely, choose honestly. Choose happiness.

Looking at me looking at you?

""...Lives are lived in circles, not linearly, with past and present looping each other. This seems especially true of me, who takes my own family history as synechdochal, standing in for the family history of the artist. My sense of the present is profoundly shaped by my sense of the past, and the past brings a peculiar pressure to bear on the present in my life and writings. I am besotted with history, my own and those of people around me. I live within this history, and the history becomes me.

So how do I manage to transform my little postage stamp of a life into an imaginative space where I can roam happily over several decades, creating a vast anthology of human experience from limited materials? I was, after all, no obvious genius from the outset, being a shy boy from Philadelphia. Unlike some writers, I have no large experience of the wider world. I write consciously, applying myself with great energy to the task before me, with a deep understanding of what I am doing.

In a very real sense, I have fathered myself, having seen fatherhood diluted as it passed down from my grandfather, then to my own hapless father. I have a visceral need to regard myself as independent of the family, to lift myself over my sister and parents and everyone else around me. I do so by making fictions, all kinds of fictions. I became an artist in my own mind, creating a story to fit this need. I have become many other things as well, an outcast, a bohemian poet, a world traveler, a historian, a friend, a criminal, and so forth. These are all masks put on for the occasion, the life-phase, the person in front of me, the immediate need.

.... Over time, the mask has grown onto my face, becoming my features, the very skin itself. Only the wild, sad eyes peeking out through the mask tell the world about the soul lurking behind it. Those eyes, with their countless changes, suggest something of the many thousand selves that make up the person called...g. Friedman

Schwerin in October

Middle of October! We are right in the thick of it:) Crisp days, cool nights, sharp mornings...bountiful apples, crackling leaves, dark starry nights, pots of Castle soup, warm Apple cakes, fresh air and perfect walks... love it! I wish I was there...

Living in Grace

In the midst of madness,
when everything just seems chaotic,
a little shaky,
a little uncertain,
when questions remain unanswered
and the future seems a little hazy,
just one word
can make you stop
and smile.
And suddenly,
 
the day just seems a little bit brighter.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Quiet before the storm!

Only as high as I reach can I grow,
Only as far as I seek can I go,
Only as deep as I look can I see,
Only as much as I dream can I be!

Tyranny

Persian Letters

'Genius' Blogger Sentenced To 15 Years

Iranian blogger Hossein Maleki Ronaghi has been reportedly sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Ronaghi’s mother, Zoleikha Mousavi, told the BBC's Persian service that authorities informed him about the heavy prison sentence verbally.

She said that Ronaghi has been on a hunger strike since October 3 to protest his mistreatment in prison. He’s reportedly being held in an Evin prison ward that is controlled by the Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Ronaghi’s mother says that her son, who was arrested during the June 2009 postelection crackdown, has spent 300 days in solitary confinement. Charges against him reportedly include acting against Iran’s national security and working with foreign media. She says her son has said that he has been threatened in jail with execution and that he's been pressured to make false confessions.

Ronaghi, who blogged under the name Babak Khoramdin, is often described as a “genius” because of his computer and online skills.

Sighting a Possible Path



The end may not be anywhere in sight.
But sighting a possible path
is a welcome relief.
Now, for the task of
finding a way out of the woods

Of Hope and agony

In a vision blurred by tears,
I watch as hope flaps its wings and flies away
across the sky that once painted many coloured dreams
Leaving me behind, waiting helplessly;
Words caught in my throat;
Silently willing it to turn around
and come back to me.

"Words for today are borrowed from Meister Eckhart's poem "The Hope of Loving."

What keeps us alive, what allows us to endure?
I think it is the hope of loving,
or being loved.


I heard a fable once about the sun going on a journey

to find its source, and how the moon wept
without her lover’s
warm gaze.


We weep when light does not reach our hearts. We
wither like fields if someone close
does not rain their
kindness
upon
us.

Forgive and forget? Yes

"There is no love without forgiveness, and there is no forgiveness without love."
~Bryant H. McGill~
***

"To forgive is the highest, most beautiful form of love.
In return, you will receive untold peace and happiness."~Robert Muller~

Holding hands

Wrestling the inner demons
and finding the determination from within to fight for long-held dreams
and to never give up
~however impossible it looks right now~
seems a less difficult task
when there is someone beside me
to hold my hand along the way.

“Confront the dark parts of yourself, and work to banish them with illumination and forgiveness. Your willingness to wrestle with your demons will cause your angels to sing.

Use the pain as fuel, as a reminder of your strength.”
~August Wilson~

Monday, October 18, 2010

Pablo Picaso: " It takes a long time to become young"

"Become who you are"... Friedrich Nietzsche

 All of us are indeed, a work in progress...I believe, the whole  purpose of this lifetime journey is, to be able to eventually "become who we are".   The image I have in my head, looks a lot like this beautiful photograph; a long road that keeps on going...a path into the unknown. It takes the greatest courage to be who you are and who you meant to be.



Sunday, October 17, 2010

Forgotten Poet

by Ryszard Antolak
17-Oct-2010
 
How can I write?
The paper is so small
and the sorrows of the world so great
they reach up to the stars.
How am I to fit the whole sky
into my little notebook?


For most of her tragically short life, Ksenia Nekrasova lived in abject poverty without even a bed to call her own, totally dependent on the generosity of friends. She published only one slim volume of poems during her lifetime. Derided and dismissed by most of her contemporaries, she enriched the lives of a whole generation of poets in ways which only later (after her death) bore the indelible signature of her unique vision.
Like her poetry, she was innocent and wild, original and unconventional, pledged to her verses through all disaster. Poetry came to her as naturally as breathing. She jotted it down on any scrap of paper that presented itself: the backs of letters, bus tickets or shopping receipts.
Are they my poems?
or me myself?
It’s all the same:
the difference is only one of form.
Apart from that
there’s nothing
but withered petals
on the floor.




In physical appearance, she was modest and small, with dark liquid eyes. Her disheveled appearance, poverty, and strange habits made people assume she was mentally ill. Her voice, always in the minor key, had a distinct singing quality like someone telling a fairy tale to a child. It was composed of rounded vowels and long expressive pauses. (Marvelous were these pauses). When she recited her verses, the index finger of her hand moved if she was conducting an invisible orchestra.

The stories she told of her “idyllic childhood” were without number; but the reality was quite different. Few poets had lives of such tragedy and hardship. Abandoned by her parents at a very early age, she spent her formative years in a state orphanage before being adopted by a middle-aged teacher and his wife.
But there was a lingering (and often repeated) mystery in Ksenia’s past. She had distinct memories of being visited at the orphanage by a richly-dressed woman who brought her lavish and expensive gifts. There were also flashes of a forest monastery whose vast congregation stood up in unison to bless her with thundering applause. Whether the memories were true or not we do not know, for the fictions within which Ksenia Nekrasova lived were not known to everyone. Years after her death, wild stories were still circulating that she was the illegitimate daughter of the last Tsar, or alternatively, of Grigori Rasputin.




If there was ever a time when she was genuinely happy, the War turned everything to ashes. Together with her husband and young son, Ksenia found herself in Central Asia, washed up in the vast tide of refugees fleeing eastwards to escape the German advance. Disease, hunger and desperation were everywhere. During a heavy bombing raid, some flying splinters from a floor blew into her, killing her only son whom she was cradling in her arms. The hands that held the child received the full force of the blast, and Ksenia never again regained the full use of them. (Her childlike, chaotic handwriting dates from this time). Shortly afterwards, her husband’s mind became deranged beyond all remedy and she could no longer care for him. Inconsolable with grief, she broke her mind on the memory of her loss.


Where are you...?
How many times must I call you?
How long must I wait for a response?
If I had a hundred hands
I’d search for you
Through every blade of grass
And sift the dust grains of the earth
Through my fingers
To find your eyes again
.
Now began the darkest season of her life: interminable months of wandering through unremembered cities, sleeping in the ruins of deserted buildings, searching for any piece of rancid food to quench her hunger. Her intermittent headaches became more frequent and severe. At times, the tide of depression threatened to overwhelm her.

The rain beats heavily on the roof
The night is black behind the window!
And once again those thoughts –
Terrifying spiders
emerging from dark corners
O God!
If only you existed!

Alone, without friends or family, she set out on foot for Tashkent, where by some miracle, she was found by a local family who took pity on her and cared for her needs. As a result, her health began to improve and her mind to brighten. There came a day when the mist finally lifted from her eyes, and she was able to write in her diary:

How beautiful the world is!
If somewhat lonely
among these stars and rocky planets


It was in Tashkent that she met Anna Akhmatova who immediately recognized her unusual talent and furnished her with letters of introduction to important poets. Ksenia could not contain her joy. She began to indulge in the wildest hopes! Before long, she was pursuing her dreams to Moscow where, on the recommendation of a friend, she attempted to gain admittance to the Union of Soviet Writers, without whose endorsement no-one in Russia could be published.

She was fortunate in finding writers such as Stepan Shchypachov and Leonid Sobolev to fight her cause. Her most loyal friend, Mikhail Svietlov, gave a stirring speech to the Union in which he spoke of Ksenia’s desperate material circumstances. Those poets who called her uneducated and naïve, he declared, were guilty of envy. Whatever any of them said in public, they were all secretly jealous of her poetry because no ambition could make her simplicity their own.

The day came when the chairman of the Soviet Writer’s Union, Alexander Fadeyev, invited her to visit him. Ksenia arrived with violets twisted into her hair. She waited outside the house for hours before summoning up the courage to enter. Fadeyev had never met her before, but talk of her poetic powers had penetrated even to his comfortable office in Moscow. When he finally received her, he was overwhelmed by her childlike candor and charm. Ksenia was a revelation to him. The facts of her weaknesses, her wounded voice, and above all the purity and directness of her poetry, made such an impression upon him that he kept her for hours, refusing to let her go, asking her to recite another, and yet another of her verses to him.
When the time finally came for her to leave, he told her in confidence that he had never heard anyone recite their poetry with so much love. “Don’t worry, Ksenia”, he added, “your time will come. Have faith”



But it was not to be. The members of the Union refused her application for membership. Her poetry, they said, was naïve, ridiculous and far too concerned with western bourgeois matters. Her blank verse was wild and chaotic and could not be taken seriously. Many of them tapped fingers to their heads, sniggered, and aired rumors of her madness.
So Ksenia returned to her rented room in the basement of the Writer’s Union, a room in which there was nothing but a single mattress redolent with damp and despair, a room as narrow as one might have expected of a cupboard used to store linens . She told her friends:” I sit here on the floor and put my board on my knees and write. I live well enough”.
Content with the barest, she now asked for nothing. Her salvation, she decided, lay scattered in the pages of her notebooks to which she confided the contents of her soul. Happily, her disappointments did not destroy her joy at being alive, fertile in imagination, a human being with a face and a name.

I touched your hand
And every lilac blossomed
The hawthorn hid its thorns in blooms
And in the twinkling of an eye
The whole world turned into spring...




From this time onwards, she refused all invitations to appear at the fashionable soirees of Moscow writers. “Hope”, she said, “is sooner found among the comfortless than among those who have made themselves at home in a world of greed and hypocrisy”. Spurned by the Union of Soviet Writers, she now began to spend more and more time among the artists and painters of the capital who, recognizing her unusual artistic sensibility, took her warmly to their hearts. They fed and clothed her when she needed it, paid her bills, and gave her somewhere to stay. Many of them (such as Ilya Glazunov and Robert Falk) painted portraits of her which were so stunning they drew all eyes.
In Falk’s famous (1950) portrait of Ksenia, she is shown wearing a red flannel dress and a necklace of pearls. In fact, the poet had made the necklace out of dried beans strung together on a piece of thread (a feat of which she was justifiable proud). The red dress, made famous in one of Ksenia’s later poems, was a gift from her friend Lila Yahontova.

Ksenia spent the last days of her life in dire poverty, always listening for a knock at the door, or waiting for a letter that would confirm that her poems were at last to be published.
At the very end of her life, Destiny seemed at last to to smile upon her when she gave birth to a baby boy, the greatest joy of her life. Ksenia had such wonderful plans for them both, but her dire material circumstances could not be overcome. She was forced to place her son temporarily in an orphanage while she searched for a flat. And it was while she was preparing and decorating a room for them both that she suffered a serious fall, from which she never recovered.

The poet Nikholai Aseyev wrote of her:

“We waited such a long time for a poet like her to appear; and when she did, we put every obstacle we could find in her way.”
She died on February 17 1958 at the age of only 46.

Almost twenty years later, the Union of Soviet Writers admitted her as a posthumous member of their organization.

I shall live a long time, I think
For I am a fragment of Russia
And rivers of pine resin
Flow freely through my veins……

Ksenia Nekrasova 1912-1958.
(Forgotten Poet)